Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeon, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
Background Compensatory hyperhidrosis remains the most significant complication after endoscopic thoracic sympathectomy (ETS) for primary palmar hyperhidrosis. However, its temporal evolution and long-term predictors are not fully elucidated. Methods This multicenter retrospective study included 226 patients who underwent bilateral clip-based ETS between 2009 and 2023. Patients were stratified by surgical level: R3 (n ¼ 60), R4 (n ¼ 72), R2–R4 (n ¼ 81), and asymmetric interruption (n ¼ 13). Compensatory hyperhidrosis severity was assessed at 6 and 12 months, and final follow-up (mean 98 months). Logistic regression identified independent predictors of compensatory hyperhidrosis, recurrence, and patient satisfaction. Results Complete palmar dryness was achieved in 84.5% of patients. Compensatory hyperhidrosis occurred in 48.7%, exclusively within the first 6 postoperative months, with no late-onset cases. During long-term follow-up, spontaneous regression of compensatory hyperhidrosis was observed in 28.2% of affected patients. Compensatory hyperhidrosis incidence differed significantly across surgical levels (p ¼ 0.011): 38.3% (R3), 55.6% (R4), 63.0% (R2–R4), and 30.8% (asymmetric). Multivariate analysis confirmed multi-level R2–R4 sympathectomy as an independent predictor of compensatory hyperhidrosis (OR ¼ 2.18, p ¼ 0.042), while single-level R4 interruption provided the lowest persistent compensatory hyperhidrosis burden. Overall satisfaction was 79.6%, and recurrence—not compensatory hyperhidrosis—was the main determinant of dissatisfaction (OR ¼ 2.48, p < 0.001). Smoking history independently predicted recurrence (OR ¼ 2.09, p ¼ 0.042). Conclusion Compensatory hyperhidrosis develops exclusively during the early postoperative period and shows partial spontaneous improvement over time. Multi-level interruption significantly increases compensatory hyperhidrosis risk without improving efficacy, supporting limited single-level approaches (preferably R4). These findings emphasize the importance of surgical level selection, smoking cessation, and realistic postoperative counseling.